Odisha News, Odisha Latest news, Odisha Daily - OrissaPOST
  • Home
  • Trending
  • State
  • Metro
  • National
  • International
  • Business
  • Feature
  • Entertainment
  • Sports
  • More..
    • Odisha Special
    • Editorial
    • Opinion
    • Careers
    • Sci-Tech
    • Timeout
    • Horoscope
    • Today’s Pic
  • Video
  • Epaper
  • News in Odia
  • Home
  • Trending
  • State
  • Metro
  • National
  • International
  • Business
  • Feature
  • Entertainment
  • Sports
  • More..
    • Odisha Special
    • Editorial
    • Opinion
    • Careers
    • Sci-Tech
    • Timeout
    • Horoscope
    • Today’s Pic
  • Video
  • Epaper
  • News in Odia
No Result
View All Result
OrissaPOST - Odisha Latest news, English Daily -
No Result
View All Result

NATO’s Defence Market

Updated: July 3rd, 2026, 08:00 IST
in Opinion
0
Fiona E. Murray & Robert Murray
Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on WhatsAppShare on Linkedin

By Fiona E. Murray & Robert Murray

When World War II began in 1939, Canada had almost no meaningful military industry. Six years later, Canadian factories had produced thousands of aircraft, hundreds of naval vessels, and more than 800,000 military vehicles. A country of just 11 million people had become a military-industrial powerhouse.

Also Read

Santosh Kumar Mohapatra

Human capital is real wealth

1 day ago

GULF NEEDS TIES WITH IRAN

2 days ago

Heavy government investment was vital to this transformation. But that spending would have meant little if Canada had not also built institutions, financing mechanisms, and physical structures capable of rapidly transforming political commitments into large-scale industrial output.

As NATO’s leaders gather in Ankara for their 2026 summit on July 7-8, they should be taking this lesson to heart. Across Europe and North America, governments are ramping up their defence spending. They are announcing new equipment plans, procurement programmes, and spending targets, including commitments to spend 5 per cent of GDP on defense by 2035.

Establishing defence as a strategic priority, increasing spending, and improving procurement systems are all steps in the right direction. But converting resources into military capabilities will require the development of industrial capacity.

Ukraine has demonstrated that modern wars are financed before they are fought. Since Russia’s full-scale invasion in 2022, Ukraine has mobilized billions of dollars to expand drone development and production. The returns have been extraordinary: drones costing just a few thousand dollars can destroy military equipment worth hundreds or even thousands of times more. Even when intercepted, they impose big losses on Russia, which might have to fire air-defense missiles costing tens or hundreds of thousands of dollars.

None of this would have been possible without financing for the factories, engineers, software, supply chains, and production capacity needed to produce drones at scale.

NATO countries do not lack resources, technological expertise, or political will. What they lack are market structures capable of converting these strengths into military capabilities at the speed and scale today’s security environment demands. Production capacity remains constrained, delivery schedules stretch years into the future, and critical supply chains are fragile.

As bottlenecks persist, defense inflation continues to climb, eroding purchasing power and delaying the fielding of urgently needed capabilities.

If NATO allies are to build the industrial capacity required for deterrence, they will need to deliver wartime levels of industrial responsiveness without adopting wartime levels of economic control. This requires a new approach to market-making.

The first challenge is creating reliable long-term demand—a prerequisite for private investment in building new factories or expanding production lines. This means that national governments must make credible, multi-year procurement commitments, both independently and with allies.

The second challenge is financing this new demand. Even when future orders exist, industrial expansion requires access to affordable long-term capital. New factories, equipment, and production lines require significant upfront investment. Manufacturers typically borrow from commercial banks to fund these investments, with the cost of this capital ultimately reflected in the price governments pay for military equipment and munitions. Where commercial finance is unavailable or too expensive, governments often have little choice but to step in.

A market-making approach would be both more cost-effective and more productive than the current system. It begins with a purpose-built multilateral institution that serves as a dedicated financing platform for the development and expansion of defense industries and related supply chains.

This is precisely the role that the Defence, Security and Resilience Bank (DSRB), now under discussion, is designed to play. By creating a sovereign-backed market for defence finance, the DSRB would help to reduce the cost of financing industrial expansion. The more secure financing environment that this implies—together with long-term demand commitments that offer assurance of future revenues—would attract commercial lenders and crowd in private investment.

This would go a long way toward easing pressure on defence budgets, which, in the current system, must cover not only direct investments in military capabilities but also the associated financing costs, industrial risk, and inefficiency. The more the latter costs can be reduced, the more drones, missiles, and ammunition governments can afford.

Committing more resources is good, but doing more with the resources that have already been committed is better.

The DSRB represents more than another lending institution. Over time, it would create a dedicated AAA-rated defense, security, and resilience yield curve. Firms, banks, and governments could thus secure financing conditions specifically designed for the long investment horizons required to build factories, strengthen supply chains, and expand defense production.

Strengthening defence capabilities is not only about security policy. It is also industrial policy. The same investments that strengthen deterrence can also support manufacturing, innovation, exports, and economic growth.

With multi-year procurement delivering the demand signal and the DSRB providing the financing platform, allies can finally build a functioning defence market. Such a market would not replace national defence budgets; it would make them more effective. Defense spending would become investment. Investment would become production. And production would become a deterrent.

In 1939, Canada did not become a military-industrial powerhouse simply because it spent more money than everyone else. Rather, it built the institutions, financing mechanisms, and industrial structures that turned spending into production.

Fiona E. Murray is Professor of Entrepreneurship at the MIT Sloan School of Management and Chair of the NATO Innovation Fund. Robert Murray, a professor of practice at Johns Hopkins University, is a former head of innovation at NATO.

Orissa POST – Odisha’s No.1 English Daily
ShareTweetSendShare
Suggest A Correction

Enter your email to get our daily news in your inbox.

 

OrissaPOST epaper Sunday POST OrissaPOST epaper

Click Here: Plastic Free Odisha

#MyPaperBagChallenge

Lopali Pattnaik

December 12, 2019
#MyPaperBagChallenge

Shreyanshu Bal

December 12, 2019
#MyPaperBagChallenge

Sisirkumar Maharana

December 12, 2019
#MyPaperBagChallenge

Debasis Mohanty

December 12, 2019
#MyPaperBagChallenge

Subhajyoti Mohanty

December 12, 2019
#MyPaperBagChallenge

Ramakanta Sahoo

December 12, 2019
#MyPaperBagChallenge

Praptimayee Biswal

December 12, 2019
#MyPaperBagChallenge

Priyabrata Mohanty

December 12, 2019
#MyPaperBagChallenge

Surya Sidhant Rath

December 12, 2019
#MyPaperBagChallenge

Sarmistha Nayak

December 12, 2019
#MyPaperBagChallenge

Ipsita

December 12, 2019
#MyPaperBagChallenge

Rajashree Pravati Mohanty

December 12, 2019
#MyPaperBagChallenge

Aishwarya Ranjan Mohanty

December 12, 2019
#MyPaperBagChallenge

Sarfraz Ahmad

December 12, 2019
#MyPaperBagChallenge

Akriti Negi

December 12, 2019
#MyPaperBagChallenge

Pitabas Tripathy

December 12, 2019
#MyPaperBagChallenge

Spinoj Pattnaik

December 12, 2019
#MyPaperBagChallenge

Arya Ayushman

December 12, 2019
#MyPaperBagChallenge

Saishree Satyarupa

December 12, 2019
#MyPaperBagChallenge

Matrumangal Jena

December 12, 2019
#MyPaperBagChallenge

Anasuya Sahoo

December 12, 2019
#MyPaperBagChallenge

Tabish Maaz

December 12, 2019
#MyPaperBagChallenge

Amritansh Mishra

December 12, 2019
#MyPaperBagChallenge

Pragyan Priyambada

December 12, 2019
#MyPaperBagChallenge

Pratik Kumar

December 12, 2019
#MyPaperBagChallenge

D Rama Rao

December 12, 2019
#MyPaperBagChallenge

Ankita Balabantray

December 12, 2019
#MyPaperBagChallenge

Nishikant Rout

December 12, 2019
#MyPaperBagChallenge

Akshaya Kumar Dash

December 12, 2019
#MyPaperBagChallenge

Jhili Jena

December 12, 2019

Archives

Editorial

Cyber Golden Triangle

July 1, 2026

Online users nowadays are faced with clever scams, harassment, bullying, blackmail, extortion and grooming or honey trapping schemes on a...

Read moreDetails

EU-Taliban Trap

European Union
June 30, 2026

The European Union has lent itself to criticism for a controversial meeting of its officials with Taliban representatives in Brussels...

Read moreDetails

Writings On A Wall

National War Memorial
June 29, 2026

A nation remembers its wars not only through victories but also through the names of those who never returned to...

Read moreDetails

Rules Over Rights

Rights & Restrictions: AAKAR PATEL
June 28, 2026

By Aakar Patel What cannot be passed in Parliament as law can be incarnated as a change in the rules....

Read moreDetails
  • Home
  • State
  • Metro
  • National
  • International
  • Business
  • Editorial
  • Opinion
  • Sports
  • About Us
  • Advertise
  • Contact Us
  • Jobs
Developed By Ratna Technology

© 2025 All rights Reserved by OrissaPOST

  • News in Odia
  • Orissa POST Epaper
  • Video
  • Home
  • Trending
  • Metro
  • State
  • Odisha Special
  • National
  • International
  • Sports
  • Business
  • Editorial
  • Entertainment
  • Horoscope
  • Careers
  • Feature
  • Today’s Pic
  • Opinion
  • Sci-Tech
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Jobs

© 2025 All rights Reserved by OrissaPOST

    • News in Odia
    • Orissa POST Epaper
    • Video
    • Home
    • Trending
    • Metro
    • State
    • Odisha Special
    • National
    • International
    • Sports
    • Business
    • Editorial
    • Entertainment
    • Horoscope
    • Careers
    • Feature
    • Today’s Pic
    • Opinion
    • Sci-Tech
    • About Us
    • Contact Us
    • Jobs

    © 2025 All rights Reserved by OrissaPOST